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1.
Scavenger receptor, class B, type I (SR-BI) is a cell-surface glycoprotein that mediates selective uptake of high density lipoprotein cholesteryl ester (CE) without the concomitant uptake and degradation of the particle. We have investigated the endocytic and selective uptake of low density lipoprotein (LDL)-CE by SR-BI using COS-7 cells transiently transfected with mouse SR-BI. Analysis of lipoprotein uptake data showed a concentration-dependent LDL-CE-selective uptake when doubly labeled LDL particles were incubated with SR-BI-expressing COS-7 cells. In contrast to vector-transfected cells, SR-BI-expressing COS-7 cells showed marked increases in LDL cell association and CE uptake by the selective uptake pathway, but only a modest increase in CE uptake by the endocytic pathway. SR-BI-mediated LDL-CE-selective uptake exceeded LDL endocytic uptake by 50-100-fold. SR-BI-mediated LDL-CE-selective uptake was not inhibited by the proteoglycan synthesis inhibitor, p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xylopyranoside or by the sulfation inhibitor sodium chlorate, indicating that SR-BI-mediated LDL-CE uptake occurs independently of LDL interaction with cell-surface proteoglycan. Analyses with subclones of Y1 adrenocortical cells showed that LDL-CE-selective uptake was proportional to the level of SR-BI expression. Furthermore, antibody directed to the extracellular domain of SR-BI blocked LDL-CE-selective uptake in adrenocortical cells. Thus, in cells that normally express SR-BI and in transfected COS-7 cells SR-BI mediates the efficient uptake of LDL-CE via the selective uptake mechanism. These results suggest that SR-BI may influence the metabolism of apoB-containing lipoproteins in vivo by mediating LDL-CE uptake into SR-BI-expressing cells.  相似文献   

2.
The relationship between the cholesteryl ester content of normal human very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) and its ability to bind to apolipoprotein E (apoE), heparin, and the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor have been compared. Plasma VLDL were separated by heparin affinity chromatography into two fractions: one with apoE and one without. Both fractions had the same cholesteryl ester content relative to apolipoprotein B (apoB). LDL, on the other hand, had a greater cholesteryl ester content. VLDL were modified by lipolysis to express the ability to bind apoE (Ishikawa, Y., Fielding, C. J., and Fielding, P. E. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 2744-2749). Lipolyzed VLDL with or without apoE were compared for their ability to bind to heparin or the up-regulated fibroblast LDL receptor. Lipolyzed VLDL bound with the same affinity to the receptor whether or not the particles contained apoE. ApoB, not apoE, appears then to be the important ligand for normal VLDL. On the other hand, modified VLDL without apoE, even though binding to the LDL receptor, did not bind to heparin. These data suggest that apoE mediates heparin binding in normal VLDL, that apoB mediates receptor binding, and that the cholesteryl ester content of VLDL is not a factor in the induction of the ability to bind apoE.  相似文献   

3.
The interaction between high density lipoproteins (HDL) and adipose tissue is an important pathway for cholesterol and cholesteryl ester flux. In intact fat cells, a disproportionately greater net uptake of cholesteryl ester occurs subsequent to lipoprotein binding than would have been predicted from a consideration of holoparticle uptake alone. To characterize the early events in this process, cholesteryl hexadecyl ether, a nonmetabolizable, accumulative marker of cholesteryl ester, was incorporated into canine HDL2, and its uptake by omental adipocyte plasma membranes was measured in relation to the binding of HDL2, which in this animal species is enriched in apolipoprotein A-I and free of apolipoprotein E. The dose-response profile for HDL2 binding was consistent with a single lipoprotein binding site at all concentrations of HDL2, whereas uptake of cholesteryl ester from HDL2 was biphasic, suggesting a high affinity site at low HDL2 concentrations and a low affinity site at high lipoprotein concentrations. Pronase treatment stimulated binding twofold and this was accompanied by a parallel twofold stimulation of cholesteryl ester uptake. EDTA, on the other hand, reduced binding and uptake of cholesteryl ester by 20%, indicating partial dependence upon divalent cations. The proportion of HDL2 cholesteryl ester accumulated by plasma membranes relative to HDL2 protein bound was not altered by either pronase or EDTA, despite the fact that these agents had opposite effects upon binding. In dissociation studies, a portion of membrane-associated HDL2 did not equilibrate with exogenous HDL2 and a greater proportion of the cholesteryl ester failed to dissociate. A stepwise mechanism for cholesteryl ester uptake, involving (i) saturable, high affinity HDL2 binding to cell surface sites, (ii) vectoral, HDL2 concentration-dependent delivery of cholesteryl ester to the membrane, and (iii) cholesteryl ester sequestration into a nonexchangeable membrane compartment, appears to be independent of metabolic energy or cell processing.  相似文献   

4.
Cells acquire lipoprotein cholesterol by receptor-mediated endocytosis and selective uptake pathways. In the latter case, lipoprotein cholesteryl ester (CE) is transferred to the plasma membrane without endocytosis and degradation of the lipoprotein particle. Previous studies with Y1/E/tet/2/3 murine adrenocortical cells that were engineered to express apolipoprotein (apo) E demonstrated that apoE expression enhances low density lipoprotein (LDL) CE uptake by both selective and endocytic pathways. The present experiments test the hypothesis that apoE-dependent LDL CE selective uptake is mediated by scavenger receptor, class B, type I (SR-BI). Surprisingly, SR-BI expression was not detected in the Y1/E/tet/2/3 clone of Y1 adrenocortical cells, indicating the presence of a distinct apoE-dependent pathway for LDL CE selective uptake. ApoE-dependent LDL CE selective uptake in Y1/E/tet/2/3 cells was inhibited by receptor-associated protein and by activated alpha(2)-macroglobulin (alpha(2)M), suggesting the participation of the LDL receptor-related protein/alpha(2)M receptor. Reagents that inhibited proteoglycan synthesis or removed cell surface chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan completely blocked apoE-dependent LDL CE selective uptake. None of these reagents inhibited SR-BI-mediated LDL CE selective uptake in the Y1-BS1 clone of Y1 cells in which LDL CE selective uptake is mediated by SR-BI. We conclude that LDL CE selective uptake in adrenocortical cells occurs via SR-BI-independent and SR-BI-dependent pathways. The SR-BI-independent pathway is an apoE-dependent process that involves both chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans and an alpha(2)M receptor.  相似文献   

5.
Plasma cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) mediates the transfer of cholesteryl esters (CE) between lipoproteins and was reported to also directly mediate the uptake of high density lipoprotein (HDL) CE by human Hep G2 cells and fibroblasts. The present study investigates that uptake and its relationship to a pathway for "selective uptake" of HDL CE that does not require CETP. HDL3 labeled in both the CE and apoprotein moieties was incubated with Hep G2 cells. During 4-h incubations, CE tracer was selectively taken up from doubly labeled HDL3 in excess of apoA-I tracer, and added CETP did not modify that uptake. However, during 18-20-h incubations, CETP stimulated the uptake of CE tracer more than 4-fold without modifying the uptake of apoA-I tracer. This suggested that secreted products, perhaps lipoproteins, might be required for the CETP effect. Four inhibitors of lipoprotein uptake via low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors (heparin, monensin, an antibody against the LDL receptor, and antibodies against the receptor binding domains of apoB and apoE) effectively blocked the CETP stimulation of CE tracer uptake. Heparin caused an increase in CE tracer in a d less than 1.063 g/ml fraction of the medium that more than accounted for the heparin blockade of CETP-stimulated CE uptake. CETP did not affect the uptake of doubly labeled HDL3 by human fibroblasts, even at twice plasma levels of activity, and heparin did not modify uptake of HDL3 tracers. Thus the CETP effect on Hep G2 cells can be accounted for by transfer of HDL CE to secreted lipoproteins which are then retaken up, and there is no evidence for a direct effect of CETP on cellular uptake of HDL CE.  相似文献   

6.
The Class B type I scavenger receptor I (SR-BI) is a physiologically relevant high density lipoprotein (HDL) receptor that can mediate selective cholesteryl ester (CE) uptake by cells. Direct interaction of apolipoprotein E (apoE) with this receptor has never been demonstrated, and its implication in CE uptake is still controversial. By using a human adrenal cell line (NCI-H295R), we have addressed the role of apoE in binding to SR-BI and in selective CE uptake from lipoproteins to cells. This cell line does not secrete apoE and SR-BI is its major HDL-binding protein. We can now provide evidence that 1) free apoE is a ligand for SR-BI, 2) apoE associated to lipids or in lipoproteins does not modulate binding or CE-selective uptake by the SR-BI pathway, and 3) the direct interaction of free apoE to SR-BI leads to an increase in CE uptake from lipoproteins of both low and high densities. We propose that this direct interaction could modify SR-BI structure in cell membranes and potentiate CE uptake.  相似文献   

7.
The scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI) mediates the cellular selective uptake of cholesteryl esters and other lipids from high-density lipoproteins (HDL) and low-density lipoproteins (LDL). This process, unlike classical receptor-mediated endocytosis, does not result in lipoprotein degradation. Instead, the lipid depleted particles are released into the medium. Here we show that selective lipid uptake mediated by murine SR-BI can be uncoupled from the endocytosis of HDL or LDL particles. We found that blocking selective lipid uptake by incubating cells with the small chemical inhibitors BLT-1 or BLT-4 did not affect endocytosis of HDL. Similarly, blocking endocytosis by hyperosmotic sucrose or K+ depletion did not prevent selective lipid uptake from HDL or LDL. These findings suggest that mSR-BI-mediated selective uptake occurs at the cell surface upon the association of lipoproteins with mSR-BI and does not require endocytosis of HDL or LDL particles.  相似文献   

8.
Human Lp[a] can be fractionated into two species with different affinities for lysine-Sepharose. Forty to 81% of the total Lp[a] in the density fraction 1.055-1.15 g/ml from five individuals was retained by this affinity column. The remaining unretained Lp[a] species with no apparently functional lysine binding site was similar to the retained species in its electrophoretic mobility, lipid, protein, and apolipoprotein composition, and the heterogeneity was not related to apo[a] size polymorphism. Interaction of the two species with the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor was studied in human fibroblasts. Using gold-labeled lipoproteins and an immunochemical procedure, both Lp[a] species could be located in clusters on the cell surface, but the extent of labeling was far lower than that seen with LDL. Both Lp[a] variants were less effective than LDL in 1) down-regulation of LDL-receptor activity; 2) suppression of cellular sterol synthesis; and 3) stimulation of cholesteryl ester formation in human fibroblasts. Although degradation of both species of Lp[a] by the perfused rat liver was stimulated after estrogen induction of hepatic LDL-receptor activity, the stimulation amounted to only a quarter of that seen with LDL. The heterogeneity of Lp[a] with respect to the ability to bind epsilon-aminocarboxylic acid will need to be considered in studying the physiological role of this lipoprotein. Both Lp[a] species exhibited a similar interaction with the LDL-receptor in vitro, and confirmed previous investigations that Lp[a] is only a poor ligand for the LDL-receptor.  相似文献   

9.
Cholesteryl esters are selectively removed from high density lipoproteins by hepatocytes and steroidogenic cells through a process mediated by scavenger receptor BI. In the liver this cholesterol is secreted into bile, primarily as free cholesterol. Previous work showed that carboxyl ester lipase enhanced selective uptake of cholesteryl ether from high density lipoprotein by an unknown mechanism. Experiments were performed to determine whether carboxyl ester lipase plays a role in scavenger receptor BI-mediated selective uptake. When added to cultures of HepG2 cells, carboxyl ester lipase cofractionated with scavenger receptor BI and [(3)H]cholesteryl ether-labeled high density lipoprotein in lipid raft fractions of cell homogenates. Confocal microscopy of immunostained carboxyl ester lipase and scavenger receptor BI showed a close association of these proteins in HepG2 cells. The enzyme and receptor also cofractionated from homogenates of mouse liver using two different fractionation methods. Antibodies that block scavenger receptor BI function prevented carboxyl ester lipase stimulation of selective uptake in primary hepatocytes from carboxyl ester lipase knockout mice. Heparin blockage of cell-surface proteoglycans also prevented carboxyl ester lipase stimulation of cholesteryl ester uptake by HepG2 cells. Inhibition of carboxyl ester lipase activity in HepG2 cells reduced hydrolysis of high density lipoprotein-cholesteryl esters approximately 40%. In vivo, hydrolysis was similarly reduced in lipid rafts from the livers of carboxyl ester lipase-null mice compared with control animals. Primary hepatocytes from these mice yielded similar results. The data suggest that carboxyl ester lipase plays a physiological role in hepatic selective uptake and metabolism of high density lipoprotein cholesteryl esters by direct and indirect interactions with the scavenger receptor BI pathway.  相似文献   

10.
Apolipoprotein B (apoB) of plasma low density lipoproteins (LDL) binds to high affinity receptors on many cell types. A minor subclass of high density lipoproteins (HDL), termed HDL1, which contains apoE but lacks apoB, binds to the same receptor. Bound lipoproteins are engulfed, degraded, and regulate intracellular cholesterol metabolism and receptor activity. The HDL of many patients with liver disease is rich in apoE. We tested the hypothesis that such patient HDL would reduce LDL binding and would themselves regulate cellular cholesterol metabolism. Normal HDL had little effect on binding, uptake, and degradation of 125I-labeled LDL by cultured human skin fibroblasts. Patient HDL (d 1.063-1.21 g/ml) inhibited these processes, and in 15 of the 25 samples studied there was more than 50% inhibition at 125I-labeled LDL and HDL protein concentrations of 10 micrograms/ml and 25 micrograms/ml, respectively. There was a significant negative correlation between the percentage of 125I-labeled LDL bound and the apoE content of the competing HDL (r = -0.54, P less than 0.01). Patient 125I-labeled HDL was also taken up and degraded by the fibroblasts, apparently through the LDL-receptor pathway, stimulated cellular cholesterol esterification, increased cell cholesteryl ester content, and suppressed cholesterol synthesis and receptor activity. We conclude that LDL catabolism by the receptor-mediated pathway may be impaired in liver disease and that patient HDL may deliver cholesterol to cells.  相似文献   

11.
Apolipoprotein (apo)C-I and apoC-III are constituents of HDL and of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins that slow the clearance of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins by a variety of mechanisms. ApoC-I is an inhibitor of lipoprotein binding to the LDL receptor, LDL receptor-related protein, and VLDL receptor. It also is the major plasma inhibitor of cholesteryl ester transfer protein, and appears to interfere directly with fatty acid uptake. ApoC-III also interferes with lipoprotein particle clearance, but its principal role is as an inhibitor of lipolysis, both through the biochemical inhibition of lipoprotein lipase and by interfering with lipoprotein binding to the cell-surface glycosaminoglycan matrix where lipolytic enzymes and lipoprotein receptors reside. Variation in the expression of apoC-III has been credibly documented to have an important role in hypertriglyceridemia. Variation in the expression of apoC-I may also be important for hypertriglyceridemia under certain circumstances.  相似文献   

12.
The murine class B, type I scavenger receptor mSR-BI is a high and low density lipoprotein (HDL and LDL) receptor that mediates selective uptake of cholesteryl esters. Here we describe a reconstituted phospholipid/cholesterol liposome assay of the binding and selective uptake activities of SR-BI derived from detergent-solubilized cells. The assay, employing lysates from epitope-tagged receptor (mSR-BI-t1)-expressing mammalian and insect cells, recapitulated many features of SR-BI activity in intact cells, including high affinity and saturable (125)I-HDL binding, selective lipid uptake from [(3)H]cholesteryl ether-labeled HDL, and poor inhibition of HDL receptor activity by LDL. The novel properties of a mutated receptor (Q402R/Q418R, normal LDL binding but loss of most HDL binding) were reproduced in the assay, as was the ability of the SR-BI homologue CD36 to bind HDL but not mediate efficient lipid uptake. In this assay, essentially homogeneously pure mSR-BI-t1, prepared by single-step immunoaffinity chromatography, mediated high affinity HDL binding and efficient selective lipid uptake from HDL. Thus, SR-BI-mediated HDL binding and selective lipid uptake are intrinsic properties of the receptor that do not require the intervention of other proteins or specific cellular structures or compartments.  相似文献   

13.
Normal human monocyte-macrophages were cholesterol-loaded, and the rates of uptake and degradation of several lipoproteins were measured and compared to rates in control cells. Receptor activities for 125I-rabbit beta-very low density lipoproteins (beta-VLDL), 125I-human low density lipoprotein, and 125I-human chylomicrons were down-regulated in cholesterol-loaded cells; however, the rate of uptake and degradation of 125I-human chylomicron remnants was unchanged from control cells. Cholesterol-loaded alveolar macrophages from a Watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic rabbit, which lack low density lipoprotein receptors, showed receptor down-regulation for 125I-beta-VLDL but not for 125I-human chylomicron remnants. In addition to chylomicron remnants, apo-E-phospholipid complexes competed for 125I-chylomicron remnant uptake, but apo-A-I-phospholipid complexes did not. Chylomicrons competed for lipoprotein uptake in control cells but were not recognized under conditions of cholesterol loading. Chylomicron remnants and beta-VLDL were equally effective in competing for 125I-beta-VLDL and 125I-chylomicron remnant uptake in cholesterol-loaded macrophages. When normal human monocyte-macrophages were incubated in serum supplemented with chylomicron remnants, the cholesteryl ester content increased 4-fold over cells incubated in serum with low density lipoprotein added. We conclude: 1) specific lipoprotein receptor activity persists in cholesterol-loaded cells; 2) this receptor activity recognizes lipo-proteins (at least in part) by their apo-E content; and 3) cholesteryl ester accumulation can occur in monocyte-macrophages incubated with chylomicron remnants.  相似文献   

14.
The role of the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor in the binding of chylomicron remnants to liver membranes and in their uptake by hepatocytes was assessed using a monospecific polyclonal antibody to the LDL receptor of the rat liver. The anti-LDL receptor antibody inhibited the binding and uptake of chylomicron remnants and LDL by the poorly differentiated rat hepatoma cell HTC 7288C as completely as did unlabeled lipoproteins. The antireceptor antibody, however, decreased binding of chylomicron remnants to liver membranes from normal rats by only about 10%. This was true for intact membranes and for solubilized reconstituted membranes and with both a crude membrane fraction as well as with purified sinusoidal membranes. Further, complete removal of the LDL receptor from solubilized membranes by immunoprecipitation with antireceptor antibody only decreased remnant binding to the reconstituted supernatant by 10% compared to solubilized, nonimmunoprecipitated membranes. Treatment of rats with ethinyl estradiol induced an increase in remnant binding by liver membranes. All of the increased binding could be inhibited by the antireceptor antibody. The LDL receptor-independent remnant binding site was not EDTA sensitive and was not affected by ethinyl estradiol treatment. LDL receptor-independent remnant binding was competed for by beta-VLDL = HDLc greater than rat LDL greater than human LDL (where VLDL is very low density lipoprotein, and HDL is high density lipoprotein). There was weak and incomplete competition by apoE-free HDL, probably due to removal of apoE from the remnant. The LDL receptor-independent remnant-binding site was also present in membranes prepared from isolated hepatocytes and had the same characteristics as the site on membranes prepared from whole liver. In contrast, when chylomicron remnants were incubated with a primary culture of rat hepatocytes, the anti-LDL receptor antibody prevented specific cell association by 84% and degradation of chylomicron remnants completely. Based on these studies, we conclude that although binding of chylomicron remnants to liver cell membranes is not dependent on the LDL receptor, their intact uptake by hepatocytes is.  相似文献   

15.
High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl esters are taken up by fibroblasts via HDL particle uptake and via selective uptake, i.e., cholesteryl ester uptake independent of HDL particle uptake. In the present study we investigated HDL selective uptake and HDL particle uptake by J774 macrophages. HDL3 (d = 1.125-1.21 g/ml) was labeled with intracellularly trapped tracers: 125I-labeled N-methyltyramine-cellobiose-apo A-I (125I-NMTC-apo A-I) to trace apolipoprotein A-I (apo A-I) and [3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether to trace cholesteryl esters. J774 macrophages, incubated at 37 degrees C in medium containing doubly labeled HDL3, took up 125I-NMTC-apo A-I, indicating HDL3 particle uptake (102.7 ng HDL3 protein/mg cell protein per 4 h at 20 micrograms/ml HDL3 protein). Apparent HDL3 uptake according to the uptake of [3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether (470.4 ng HDL3 protein/mg cell protein per 4 h at 20 micrograms/ml HDL3 protein) was in significant excess on 125I-NMTC-apo A-I uptake, i.e., J774 macrophages demonstrated selective uptake of HDL3 cholesteryl esters. To investigate regulation of HDL3 uptake, cell cholesterol was modified by preincubation with low-density lipoprotein (LDL) or acetylated LDL (acetyl-LDL). Afterwards, uptake of doubly labeled HDL3, LDL (apo B,E) receptor activity or cholesterol mass were determined. Preincubation with LDL or acetyl-LDL increased cell cholesterol up to approx. 3.5-fold over basal levels. Increased cell cholesterol had no effect on HDL3 particle uptake. In contrast, LDL- and acetyl-LDL-loading decreased selective uptake (apparent uptake 606 vs. 366 ng HDL3 protein/mg cell protein per 4 h in unloaded versus acetyl-LDL-loaded cells at 20 micrograms HDL3 protein/ml). In parallel with decreased selective uptake, specific 125I-LDL degradation was down-regulated. Using heparin as well as excess unlabeled LDL, it was shown that HDL3 uptake is independent of LDL (apo B,E) receptors. In summary, J774 macrophages take up HDL3 particles. In addition, J774 cells also selectively take up HDL3-associated cholesteryl esters. HDL3 selective uptake, but not HDL3 particle uptake, can be regulated.  相似文献   

16.
We investigated the roles of lipoprotein lipase and apolipoprotein E (apoE) secreted from human monocyte-derived macrophages in the uptake of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). ApoCII-deficient VLDL were isolated from a patient with apoCII deficiency. The lipolytic conversion to higher density and the degradation of the apoCII-deficient VLDL by macrophages were very slight, whereas the addition of apoCII enhanced both their conversion and degradation. This suggests that the lipolysis and subsequent conversion of VLDL to lipoproteins of higher density are essential for the VLDL uptake by macrophages. VLDL incubated with macrophages obtained from subjects with E3/3 phenotype (E3/3-macrophages) showed a 17-fold greater affinity in inhibiting the binding of 2 micrograms/ml 125I-low density lipoprotein (LDL) to fibroblasts than native VLDL, whereas the incubation of VLDL with macrophages obtained from a subject with E2/2 phenotype (E2/2-macrophages) did not cause any increase in their affinity. Furthermore, 3 micrograms/ml 125I-VLDL obtained from a subject with E3/3 phenotype were degraded by E3/3-macrophages to a greater extent than by E2/2-macrophages (2-fold), indicating that VLDL uptake is influenced by the phenotype of apoE secreted by macrophages. From these results, we conclude that both lipolysis by lipoprotein lipase and incorporation of apoE secreted from macrophages alter the affinity of VLDL for the LDL receptors on the cells, resulting in facilitation of their receptor-mediated endocytosis.  相似文献   

17.
The rat hepatoma cell line Fu5AH has the unusual property of accumulating massive amounts of cholesteryl ester upon incubation with hypercholesterolemic serum, and especially when incubated with beta-very low density lipoproteins (beta-VLDL) from cholesterol-fed dogs. The present study was designed to identify and characterize the lipoprotein receptors that mediate the cholesteryl ester accumulation. The beta-VLDL and cholesterol-induced apolipoprotein (apo) E-containing high density lipoproteins (apoE HDLc) bound to Fu5AH cells with very high affinity (Kd approximately equal to 10(-10) M), whereas low density lipoproteins (LDL) bound with unusually low affinity (Kd approximately equal to 10(-8) M). Receptor binding activity of 125I-labeled beta-VLDL, 125I-labeled apoE HDLc, and 125I-labeled LDL was abolished by incubation in the presence of an excess of unlabeled LDL or of a polyclonal antibody to the bovine adrenal apoB,E(LDL) receptor. The receptors were completely down-regulated by preincubating Fu5AH cells with beta-VLDL, but much higher levels of beta-VLDL were required than for down-regulation of fibroblast apoB,E(LDL) receptors. Receptor binding was abolished by reductive methylation of the lysyl residues of the apolipoprotein of the beta-VLDL and by an apoE monoclonal antibody (1D7) that blocks receptor binding. The Fu5AH receptor was further characterized by using the bovine adrenal apoB,E(LDL) receptor antibody. A single protein (Mr approximately equal to 130,000) was identified in Triton extracts of whole cells, and two proteins (Mr approximately equal to 130,000 and 115,000) were found in Fu5AH cell membranes disrupted by homogenization. The Mr approximately equal to 115,000 protein was released from the membranes and did not react with an antibody to the carboxyl-terminal (cytoplasmic) domain of the apoB,E(LDL) receptors. These studies indicate that Fu5AH cells express apoB,E(LDL) receptors that have unusually low affinity for apoB-continuing lipoproteins, require large amounts of cholesterol to induce down-regulation, and are susceptible to specific proteolysis in cell homogenates. These apoB,E(LDL) receptors are responsible for the receptor-mediated uptake of beta-VLDL and chylomicron remnants by Fu5AH cells.  相似文献   

18.
Scavenger receptor, class B, type I (SR-BI) mediates the selective uptake of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesteryl ester without the uptake and degradation of the particle. In transfected cells SR-BI recognizes HDL, low density lipoprotein (LDL) and modified LDL, protein-free lipid vesicles containing anionic phospholipids, and recombinant lipoproteins containing apolipoprotein (apo) A-I, apoA-II, apoE, or apoCIII. The molecular basis for the recognition of such diverse ligands by SR-BI is unknown. We have used direct binding analysis and chemical cross-linking to examine the interaction of murine (m) SR-BI with apoA-I, the major protein of HDL. The results show that apoA-I in apoA-I/palmitoyl-oleoylphosphatidylcholine discs, HDL(3), or in a lipid-free state binds to mSR-BI with high affinity (K(d) congruent with 5-8 microgram/ml). ApoA-I in each of these forms was efficiently cross-linked to cell surface mSR-BI, indicating that direct protein-protein contacts are the predominant feature that drives the interaction between HDL and mSR-BI. When complexed with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, the N-terminal and C-terminal CNBr fragments of apoA-I each bound to SR-BI in a saturable, high affinity manner, and each cross-linked efficiently to mSR-BI. Thus, mSR-BI recognizes multiple sites in apoA-I. A model class A amphipathic alpha-helix, 37pA, also showed high affinity binding and cross-linking to mSR-BI. These studies identify the amphipathic alpha-helix as a recognition motif for SR-BI and lead to the hypothesis that mSR-BI interacts with HDL via the amphipathic alpha-helical repeat units of apoA-I. This hypothesis explains the interaction of SR-BI with a wide variety of apolipoproteins via a specific secondary structure, the class A amphipathic alpha-helix, that is a common structural motif in the apolipoproteins of HDL, as well as LDL.  相似文献   

19.
Steroid hormones are synthesized using cholesterol as precursor. To determine the functional importance of the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor and hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) in adrenal steroidogenesis, adrenal cells were isolated from control, HSL(-/-), LDLR(-/-), and double LDLR/HSL(-/-) mice. The endocytic and selective uptake of apolipoprotein E-free human high density lipoprotein (HDL)-derived cholesteryl esters did not differ among the mice, with selective uptake accounting for >97% of uptake. In contrast, endocytic uptake of either human LDL- or rat HDL-derived cholesteryl esters was reduced 80-85% in LDLR(-/-) and double-LDLR/HSL(-/-) mice. There were no differences in the selective uptake of either human LDL- or rat HDL-derived cholesteryl esters among the mice. Maximum corticosterone production induced by ACTH or dibutyryl cyclic AMP and lipoproteins was not altered in LDLR(-/-) mice but was reduced 80-90% in HSL(-/-) mice. Maximum corticosterone production was identical in HSL(-/-) and double-LDLR/HSL(-/-) mice. These findings suggest that, although the LDL receptor is responsible for endocytic delivery of cholesteryl esters from LDL and rat HDL to mouse adrenal cells, it appears to play a negligible role in the delivery of cholesterol for acute adrenal steroidogenesis in the mouse. In contrast, HSL occupies a vital role in adrenal steroidogenesis because of its link to utilization of selectively delivered cholesteryl esters from lipoproteins.  相似文献   

20.
Selective uptake of cholesteryl esters (CE) from lipoproteins by cells has been extensively studied with high density lipoproteins (HDL). It is only recently that such a mechanism has been attributed to intermediate and low density lipoproteins (IDL and LDL). Here, we compare the association of proteins and CE from very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), IDL, LDL and HDL3 to HepG2 cells. These lipoproteins were either labelled in proteins with 125I or in CE with 3H-cholesteryl oleate. We show that, at any lipoprotein concentration, protein association to the cells is significantly smaller for IDL, LDL, and HDL3 than CE association, but not for VLDL. At a concentration of 20 microg lipoprotein/mL, these associations reveal CE-selective uptake in the order of 2-, 4-, and 11-fold for IDL, LDL, and HDL3, respectively. These studies reveal that LDL and HDL3 are good selective donors of CE to HepG2 cells, while IDL is a poor donor and VLDL is not a donor. A significant inverse correlation (r2 = 0.973) was found between the total lipid/protein ratios of the four classes of lipoproteins and the extent of CE-selective uptake by HepG2 cells. The fate of 3H-CE of the two best CE donors (LDL and HDL3) was followed in HepG2 cells after 3 h of incubation. Cells were shown to hydrolyze approximately 25% of the 3H-CE of both lipoproteins. However, when the cells were treated with 100 microM of chloroquine, a lysosomotropic agent, 85 and 40% of 3H-CE hydrolysis was lost for LDL and HDL3, respectively. The fate of LDL and HDL3-CE in HepG2 cells deficient in LDL-receptor was found to be the same, indicating that the portion of CE hydrolysis sensitive to chloroquine is not significantly linked to LDL-receptor activity. Thus, in HepG2 cells, the magnitude of CE-selective uptake is inversely correlated with the total lipid/protein ratios of the lipoproteins and CE-selective uptake from the two best CE donors (LDL and HDL3) appears to follow different pathways.  相似文献   

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